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ARCHITECTURAL
EDUCATION
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We, the architects,
concerned by the future development of architecture in a fast changing
world, believe that everything, influencing the way in which the built
environment is made, used, furnished, landscaped and maintained, belongs
to the domain of the architects. We, being responsible for the improvement
of the education of future architects to enable them to work for a sustainable
development in every cultural heritage, declare : |
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II.
EDUCATION AND OBJECTIVES
0. Since architecture is created in a field of tension between reason, emotion and intuition, architectural education should be regarded as the manifestation of the ability to conceptualize, coordinate and execute the idea of building rooted in human tradition. 1. Architecture is an interdisciplinary field that comprises several major components : humanities, social and physical sciences, technology and the creative arts. Architectural education is available at Universities, Polytechnics et Academies. The education leading to formal qualifications and permitting professionals to practise in the field of architecture has to be guaranteed to be at university level with architecture as the main subject. 2. The basic goal is to develop the architect as a generalist able to resolve potential contradictions between different requirements, giving form to the society's and the individual's environmental needs.Architectural education involves the acquisition of the following: 3. |
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4.
Architectural students should be made critically aware of the political
and financial motivations behind clients' briefs and building regulations
in order to foster an ethical framework for decisionmaking within the
built environment. Young architects should be encouraged to assume responsibilities
as professionals within society.
5. Educational programs should promote architectural design which considers the cost of future maintenance, also taking into account that, unlike traditional construction methods with low maintenance materials, some contemporary, experimental and unproved industrial systems and materials require constant and expensive maintenance. 6. The balanced acquisition of knowledge and skills cited in point 3. requires a long period of maturation ; the period of studies in architecture should always be not less than five years of full-time studies in a university or an equivalent institution, plus two years experience in an architectural practice. At least one year must be devoted to professional practice following the conclusion of academic studies. The training should be formalised by an examination at the end of the programme of studies, the principal part being an individual presentation and defence of an architectural project demonstrating the acquired knowledge and concomitant skills. For this purpose, juries should include practising architects and teachers from other schools, and if possible, from other countries. 7. In order to benefit from the wide variety of teaching methods, exchange programmes for teachers, and students at advanced level, will be desirable. Ideally final projects should be shared among schools as a means of facilitating comparison between results and self-evaluation of teaching establishments, through a system of international awards and exhibitions. 8. Issues related to the architecture and the environment should be introduced as part of a general education at schools, because an early awareness of architecture is important to both future architects and users of buildings. 9. Systems for continuing education must be set up for architects ; architectural education should never be considered as a closed process. III. CRITERIA FOR ARCHITECTURAL EDUCATION In order to achieve the above mentioned goals, the following aspects should be taken into account: 1. Educational establishments are advised to create systems for self-evaluation and peer-review conducted at regular intervals, including in the review panel, teachers from other schools and practising architects. 2. Each teaching institution must adjust the number of students according to its teaching capacity. Criteria for the selection of students shall be in relation to the aptitudes required for a successful training in architecture and will be applied by means of an appropriate selection process, organised by the schools at the point of entry in the programme. 3. Modern personalised computer technology and the development of specialised software make it imperative to teach the use of computers in all aspects of architectural education. Adequate laboratories, facilities for research, advanced studies, information and data exchanges for new technologies should be provided at schools of architecture. 4. The creation of a network, on a world-wide basis, for the exchange of information, teachers and senior students, is necessary in order to promote a common understanding and to raise the level of architectural education. 5. Continuous interaction between practice and teaching of architecture must be encouraged and protected. 6. Research should be regarded as an inherent activity of architectural teachers. This architectural research must be founded on project work, construction methods, as well as academic disciplines. Specific review panels are to be created to evaluate architectural research and architects must be included in the general evaluation research commissions. 7. Design project work must be a synthesis of acquired knowledge and concomitant skills. The architectural curriculum should include the subjects referred to under the educational objectives (Section II.3.) of this charter. Individual project work with direct teacher / student dialogue must form a substantial part of the learning period and occupy half of the curriculum. CONCLUSION This Charter was created on the initiative of the UIA and UNESCO, with the ability of being applied by any architectural school on the international and national levels. We hope that this Charter could be used for the creation of a global network of architectural education within which individual achievements can be shared by all. We hope that this Charter, in its appeal to the whole world, can help in the understanding that architectural education constitutes both the socio-cultural and profesional challenge of the contemporary world, and needs the garantee of protection, development and urgent action. |
| Sourced from:-CHARTER FOR ARCHITECTURAL EDUCATION |
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